Roger Goodell Appeared To Play Dumb On The Ray Rice Elevator Video — And It Backfired

In
a letter to Ray Rice on September 12, NFL commissioner Roger
Goodell said he was suspending Rice indefinitely because the TMZ
video of Rice knocking his wife unconscious was inconsistent with
how he described the fight at his meeting with the league in
June.

"This video shows a starkly different sequence of events from
what you and your representatives stated when we met on June 16,"
Goodell wrote.

He doubled down on that justification in
an interview with CBS News, saying that Rice's statements at
the June meeting were "ambiguous about what actually happened."

Goodell was basically pleading ignorance, and the general
impression he communicated to the world was, we didn't know
what really happened inside the elevator until now.

On Friday, arbitrator and former federal judge Barbara S. Jones
ruled that Goodell and the NFL did know what really happened
inside the elevator. Rice told the league the truth at his June
meeting, Jones found. She wrote that Rice had told Goodell he had
hit his wife, knocking her unconscious after she fell into a
handrail, and his account was neither sugarcoated nor "starkly
different" than what we all saw when TMZ released video from
inside the elevator.

"I do not doubt that viewing the video in September evoked horror
in Commissioner Goodell as it did with the public," Jones
concluded. "But this does not change the fact that Rice did not
lie or mislead the NFL at the June 16 meeting."

In
her 17-page ruling, Jones calls what Rice told the NFL in
June "an accurate description of the assault."

According to Jones, the NFL argued that Rice misled them because
he used the word "slapped" instead of "hit" at the meeting and
also "tried to minimize the force of his blow by claiming she
knocked herself out by falling into the elevator handrail."

Here's how Jones describes Goodell's testimony about what Rice
told him in June: "He
recalled what Rice had said this way: that he and his wife got on
the elevator and Mrs. Rice 'struck him, he said that he
slapped her, and that she fell, hit her head, and knocked
herself out.'"

The distinction between whether Rice said "slapped" vs. "hit" is
an important one. If the NFL could prove he said "slapped" at the
meeting, they could argue that Rice misled them by downplaying
the seriousness of the fight.

But Jones concludes that Rice said "hit."

From the ruling:

However, an analysis of the testimony together with the
notes made contemporaneously by Commissioner Goodell, Birch,
Manara, and McPhee leads me to conclude that Rice told the
League that he “hit” his wife and that he did not say that
she “knocked herself out.” The Commissioner’s notes are not
detailed and do not contain any verbatim quotes of what Rice
said happened in the elevator. They do not contain the word
“slap” anywhere. They do contain the word “struck” at what
appears to be the only entry relating to Rice’s statements
about what happened in the elevator.

The only person in the room taking verbatim notes was NFLPA
lawyer Heather McPhee, who wrote that Rice used the phrase, "And
then I hit her."

Rice also demonstrated how he hit her ("making it clear that his
arm 'came across' his body and hit her") in the meeting with the
NFL, according to Jones.

Janay Rice, who was present at the June meeting, testified that
her husband told the truth. She
also told the Today Show on Monday that there was
nothing "ambiguous" about Rice's representation of the incident,
as Goodell had previously claimed.

Whether he was unintentionally misremembering the meeting or
blatantly lying in the wake of the TMZ video, Goodell was told
what happened in the elevator in June. When suspended Rice
indefinitely, he wasn't acting on any new information.

Jones has reinstated Rice, and the NFL released a statement
saying it respects the decision.